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by nohant 2031 days ago
Well OP said "Buy the M1 and switch to a fully remote development experience."

One could argue that even the "cheapest M1 + paying your remote Docker/Compute friendly machine" is not really the cheapest option. At least do not convince yourself "the new M1 chip is faster and will improve my developer experience regarding compute"

1 comments

>One could argue that even the "cheapest M1 + paying your remote Docker/Compute friendly machine" is not really the cheapest option.

You don't buy a Mac because it's the "cheapest option". You buy it because you value several extra conveniences (displays, trackpads, speakers, construction, weight, baterry life, even keyboard - before and after they've messed theirs up for 3 years). Sure, it's not better in all of those than a comparable in price PC laptop, but it's usually better in most, and unaproachable in others. The SSDs it comes with are speedy as hell also (compared to the options Dell or Lenovo has on comparably priced models).

The CPU/GPU you can find in PC a too. At least until the M1, which has the best performance/power ratio of any current PC CPU. Plus there's always macOS, which lets you have a no-fuss desktop OS than runs all your proprietary apps and a native UNIX (as opposed to WSL/WSL2). Plus an ecosystem, drivers for your external peripherals (as opposed to the hit-and-miss Linux experience).

But it's not about saving money, and "I could the same work while spending less".